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Western Outlaw

August 26, 2011

Wild life in the far west?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — Mal @ 4:30 pm

i have a book, titled, wild life in the far west, By Simpson is it valuable?

Depending on the condition, the book usually sells for around US $20

Wild life in the far west?

Looking for good historical fiction books to check out today ?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Mal @ 4:01 pm

i'm going to the library today and i LOVEEEEEEE historical fiction.
my favorite topics are:
the oregon trail / the wild west
the renaissance / medieval times
the holocaust
marie antoinette ;)
and the 40's.

i really like love stories also, but i like adventurous things too.
and anything in between.

i've read most holocaust books.. so those may be hard to reccomend lol.
any help would be so appreciated! thank you! :)

Flygirl by Sherri Smith is set in WWII. It's about an African American woman risks everything – including denying her racial heritage – to join the Women Airforce Service Pilots.

I don't know your age. There's no intention of insulting you with this suggestion:

The falconer's knot – Mary Hoffman

Looking for good historical fiction books to check out today ?

Moonshine Whiskey and Wild, Wild Women

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Mal @ 2:30 pm

By Anne Mitchell CityBeat

My daddy was a bootlegger. well, not exactly — he never sold the applejack, or “hard cider,” that he distilled in our cellar when I was a little girl, and he always told us that it was “strictly for medicinal purposes.” but now it looks like dad was ahead of his time. Bootlegging’s on the rise — legal, legit and oh so delicious.

At Tales of the Cocktail — my annual July pilgrimage to new Orleans to learn about trends in spirits — I met a crew of microdistillers; craft distillers who are the new artisans of alcohol, making small-batch liquors in quantities that the big guys wouldn’t bother with. At the seminar I attended on “America’s new Distilleries,” led by Max Watman and Matt Rowley, who wrote a book on “Moonshine,” we tasted intriguing samples from nine of these artisan producers, including a sparkling vodka from Artesian Distillers in Michigan that made the bartenders in the room buzz with anticipation: a delicious smooth, caramel-y chai liqueur from Dancing Pines distillery; and a triple-smoked whiskey from Corsair, with a label that reminded me of Reservoir Dogs.

Later I had a chance to “Meet the Craft Distillers.” Among them were folks from Laird, apple brandy brewers who were delighted to hear about my dad’s basement applejack adventures, and Piedmont Distillers, who make Catdaddy Carolina Moonshine and Junior Johnson’s Midnight Moon. I learned why Johnson, a NASCAR driver, is associated with moonshine — apparently the two things have gone together since the days of Prohibition. when backyard distillers had a new batch of white dog to sell, they’d get the county’s best driver with the fastest set of wheels to run it past the government agents on the twisty, mountain roads — hence the race circuit was born. Nowadays, Midnight Moon’s products are as legal as an afternoon at the track, but they are still bottled in Mason jars as a reminder of their origins. From their new line of fruit moonshine, my favorite was cherry — infused with big, red cherries that would make an intoxicating treat even after the booze is gone.

“There’s a lot of exciting distilling going on from these small operations, where distillers don’t have to tailor their spirits to the demands of a mass market or support big advertising campaigns,” blogger Sam Meyer of cocktailians.com, a Tales of the Cocktail veteran, told me. “We’re seeing some interesting experiments, like Tuthilltown’s use of very small barrels to expose whiskey to more wood while aging. and the current trend for white dog helps microdistilleries, as unaged whiskey is inventory that they can move right away and not tie up in a warehouse.”

All of these products are made in quantities that big distillers probably spill without really noticing — fewer than 50,000 proof gallons per year. but Wine Enthusiast magazine says, “Some of the most exciting products (this year) came out of small craft distilleries,” and I’d have to agree.

The queen of Cincinnati’s cocktail scene, Molly Wellman, is a true believer. I think part of the attraction is the passion and the individuality that Molly sees in the microdistillers — much like I see in her.

“You can tell who’s a microdistiller and who’s not, because they do everything themselves — from buying ingredients to running the operations to marketing,” Wellman says.

As she explains this, she’s holding an interview, juicing citrus for a busy night ahead and helping an employee with a stuck cash register drawer. “These are people who are passionate,” she says. “They believe in what they do.”

Wellman’s using products from several microdistilleries at Japp’s since 1848, the cocktail joint she has recently reopened on Main Street in Over-the-Rhine to much acclaim. she mentions Cincinnati brand Woodstone Creek, and Oyo (pronounced “Oh-Why-Oh”) from Middle West, a Columbus, Ohio, distiller.

“Every product is distinctive,” she says. “Oyo vodka is made in a traditional, artisan way, in a copper pot. Watershed, which is also in Columbus, uses very pure water, and that’s what makes it different. I like to use the Woodstone Creek vodka and gin in a Vesper Martini, a drink that calls for both. I like Buckeye Vodka from Dayton for a gimlet — it’s very neutral and lets the lime come through.”

Wellman loved the idea of Artesian’s sparkling vodka, but you won’t be able to try it at Japp’s anytime soon. why? I learned that there’s still a lot of Prohibition that goes on in spite of the 21st Amendment. Ohio is a control state, so a bar can only stock products that are sold in Ohio’s state-owned liquor stores, and most microdistilleries don’t make it to a state store’s shelves. In Kentucky, that’s not a problem, but you still might not find all the little guys.

Brian Hue, a retailer for Cork ’N Bottle, is skeptical: “Microbrewed beers were successful because they were competing against products that weren’t very good. There was a real need for quality in the beer industry. but is it realistic to think small distilleries are

Moonshine Whiskey and Wild, Wild Women

American Battlefields – Battle of Little Bighorn

Filed under: Julian Assange - Wikileaks — Tags: , — Mal @ 2:02 pm

The Battle of Little Bighorn is perhaps the most famous conflict between Native Americans and the U.S. government.

The clashes between the settlers of the American West and the Native Americans between 1865 and 1890 are known as the Indian Wars. Little Bighorn Battlefield is the site of the June 25, 1876 battle between the U.S. Army’s seventh cavalry, and several bands of Lakota Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho.

This is where your vacation begins, living the life of an Army horse soldier on the American Frontier, studying the tactics, techniques, and customs of the frontier army.

Relive one of the most celebrated, controversial, and debated military events in America: the Battle of the Little Bighorn. Ride out on a three-day campaign, living in authentic period tents at a traditional cavalry field encampment while conducting realistic cavalry operations.

Participate in basic cavalry encampment training where you’ll learn horse and soldier skills, practice mounted cavalry drills, and how to use weapons of the frontier cavalrymen. Cavalry training will be held near Medicine Tail Coulee, next to the Little Bighorn River, where Custer is thought to have flanked the Sioux Indian village.

Some wild west outfitters offer horseback riding tours where the actual battle of the Little Bighorn took place and see a reenactment of the battle. For a more challenging adventure, you can train to become a re-enactor and participate in the Real Bird’s Battle of the Little Bighorn.

U.S. Cavalry School offers U.S. cavalry horsemanship and tactics training, gun familiarization training for horses, reenactment training, cavalry encampments, and cavalry history instruction. Both novice and advance training courses are available.

This reenactment vacation is open to everyone over the age of 14. This would make a great family vacation as there are a number of programs offered that are specifically oriented to family members not participating in cavalry training.

Additional Activities
An adventure vacation can be a living classroom. You can retrace the paths our ancestors took in settling the past. Fun can be had on an outdoor wild west vacation.

Crow fair and Rodeo

Custer Battlefield Museum

Custer Battlefield Museum is located on the former site of Sitting Bull’s camp, on the famous Garryowen bend of the Little Bighorn River, a traditional summer hunting campsite for many Plains Indian tribes.

Several famous locations associated with the Battle of the Little Bighorn are visible from Garryowen. these sites include Reno’s hilltop defense site, Weir Point, last Stand Hill, Medicine Tail Coulee, the Crow’s Nest, the Wolf Mountains as well as the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument and Custer National Cemetery.

Artifacts at the museum include many items found at the battle site, such as:

Crow Dog’s rifle

war clubs and trade knives

cavalry spurs

Tom Custer’s Kerr revolver and an Army pistol

Lakota lance made from a cavalry guidon pole

U.S. Army-issue revolver with a holster

Beaded Indian War Shirts

a collection of moccasins

shovels used to bury the cavalry dead

an Indian necklace made from one of the rings on General Custer’s saddle,

an early Sioux dugout canoe

Tomb of the Unknown Soldier – Located at the Custer Battlefield Museum

The remains of this unknown trooper were found in 1926 and presumed to have been one of Major Reno’s men. the soldier’s body was not found until the road crew building the US 87 highway uncovered it 50 years later.

The Custer Battlefield Museum is located in Garryowen, Montana; at Exit 514 on I-90, just south of the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument.

American Battlefields – Battle of Little Bighorn

Would Buffalo Bill Cody have gone down in history if he had not started his wild west show?

"His exploits, including the scalping of the Cheyenne warrior Yellow Hair in 1876, were chronicled by reporters and novelists, who made him a folk hero. He began acting in dramas about the West, and in 1883 he organized his first Wild West show, which included stars such as Annie Oakley and Sitting Bull. The show toured in the U.S. and abroad to wide acclaim."

This quote tells us Buffalo Bill was a folk hero before he got into show business. so he probably would have been famous until public sentiments turned and many Americans began to lose respect for American Indian killers.

Would Buffalo Bill Cody have gone down in history if he had not started his wild west show?

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